As Comcast continues to bleed cable subscribers, the NBC Sports parent company is ramping up its efforts to supplement a historic confluence of sports content in February.
Comcast has developed a series of technological enhancements for Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8 and the Feb. 6–22 Winter Olympics for its 11.27 million video subscribers. That U.S. customer total, though down by 10% in the last year, still has Comcast as the No. 2 U.S. cable company behind Spectrum.
Leaning In to Sports
The efforts are the latest moves by Comcast to take advantage of what it and NBC Sports are calling “Legendary February” between its coverage of the Super Bowl, Olympics, and then later, the NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 15. A key part of the latest initiative is to slow the ongoing decline of cable subscribers.
Comcast is also leaning heavily in to the sports fandom of its cable customers. During the 2024 Paris Olympics, which generated a historic lift in the overall audience, the company’s cable subscribers beat national viewership percentages by 78%.
“This is a big retention play for us,” Comcast VP of sports entertainment, connectivity, and platforms Vito Forlenza tells Front Office Sports. “We know the majority of our customers are sports fans, and we are making our case that this is the best way to watch.”
Among the specific plans:
- Comcast will offer a low-latency 4K resolution feed of the Super Bowl that it’s calling RealTime4K. The improved picture and sound of the enhanced feed is described as up to 30 seconds faster than other 4K providers. Whether it be normal high-definition television, streaming, or 4K efforts such as this one, lag time is a common complaint from fans. RealTime4K will then be deployed for portions of the Winter Olympics.
- Sport-specific selection of individual Winter Olympics events, building on what Comcast and NBC did during the Paris Olympics in 2024. This option is designed to make it easier to navigate across Olympic coverage that will span NBC, Peacock, USA Network, and CNBC.
- A related feature called Fan View will allow users to choose the Olympic sports they are most interested in.
- A multiview feature, previously developed for its NFL, NBA, and Premier League programming, will allow users to select up to four feeds to watch simultaneously, Notably, the offering will allow for a combination of Olympic broadcasts and live sports that might be on other networks, and greater user choice overall.
- A new highlights feature will use artificial intelligence to create a curated list of short-form videos from the Olympics, creating a way to catch up on the competition from Italy that resembles a social media platform.
On Thursday, Comcast delivered a mixed earnings report that included the declines in video and broadcast subscribers, as well as a drop in net income, but a sharp boost in wireless customers. The company also lauded its live sports portfolio as “one of our most durable strengths.”
Comcast’s Peacock streaming service, also a key corporate focus during the big sports month, will have some of the extra enhancements, too, including the multiview function.